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Published December 10, 2021 | Published
Journal Article Open

Eta Carinae: A Tale of Two Periastron Passages

Abstract

Since 2002, the far-ultraviolet (FUV) flux (1150–1680 Å) of Eta Carinae, monitored by the Hubble Space Telescope/Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, has increased by an order of magnitude. This increase is attributed to partial dissipation of a line-of-sight (LOS) occulter that blocks the central core of the system. Across the 2020 February periastron passage, changes in the FUV emission show a stronger wavelength dependence than occurred across the 2003 July periastron passage. Across both periastron passages, most of the FUV spectrum dropped in flux then recovered a few months later. The 2020 periastron passage included enhancements of FUV flux in narrow spectral intervals near periastron followed by a transient absorption and recovery to pre-periastron flux levels. The drop in flux is due to increased absorption by singly ionized species as the secondary star plunges deep into the wind of the primary star, which blocks the companion's ionizing radiation. The enhanced FUV emission is caused by the companion's wind-blown cavity briefly opening a window to deeper layers of the primary star. This is the first time transient brightening has been seen in the FUV comparable to transients previously seen at longer wavelengths. Changes in resonance line-velocity profiles hint that the dissipating occulter is associated with material in LOS moving at −100 to −300 km s⁻¹, similar in velocity of structures previously associated with the 1890s lesser eruption.

Additional Information

© 2021. The American Astronomical Society. Received 2021 June 4; revised 2021 August 27; accepted 2021 August 30; published 2021 December 14. We thank the referee for much effort and useful comments that improved the presentation especially for those less familiar with η Car. We acknowledge funding from HST programs 15611 and 15992, which were accepted as supplementary observations associated with Chandra X-ray Observatory programs 20200564 and 21200197. M.F.C. is supported under the CRESST-II cooperative agreement #80GSFC17M0002 with the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. A.D. received funding from FAPESP 2019/02029-2. F.N. acknowledges FAPESP for support through process 2017/18191-8. A.J.F.M. is grateful for financial aid from NSERC (Canada). Facility: HST(STIS). -

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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October 23, 2023